27 January 2013 | 16:44

Hacker group Anonymous downs US government site

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

Photo courtesy of nortonfanclub.com Photo courtesy of nortonfanclub.com

Hacker group Anonymous said it disabled the US Sentencing Commission's website Saturday in revenge for the death of Internet freedom advocate Aaron Swartz, and vowed to release government data, AFP reports. The website of the commission, an independent agency of the US Justice Department involved in sentencing, was apparently hacked into early Saturday. Anonymous threatened to make public the encryption keys to files that could potentially embarrass judges and other federal employees, saying it acted in protest at the Justice Department's alleged mishandling of Swartz's case. Swartz was facing 35 years in prison and a $1 million fine for breaking into a closet at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to plug into the computer network. He downloaded millions of academic journal articles he had allegedly planned to distribute for free. Friends and relatives have accused overzealous prosecutors of contributing to the 26-year-old's suicide. He was found hanged in his New York apartment earlier this month. Swartz was just 14 when he co-developed the RSS feeds that are now the norm for publishing updates online and went on to help launch social news website Reddit. "As a result of the FBI's infiltration and entrapment tactics, several more of our brethren now face similar disproportionate persecution, the balance of their lives hanging on the severely skewed scales of a broken justice system," Anonymous said in a video posted on YouTube. The hackers said they had infiltrated several US government computer networks and copied secret data that they could release. Likening the data to a nuclear weapon, Anonymous said it had "enough fissile material for multiple warheads" it could launch against the Justice Department and agencies that the group says intrude on individual liberties. The FBI said in a statement that it was investigating the attack. "We were aware as soon as it happened and are handling it as a criminal investigation," said Richard McFeely, of the bureau's Criminal, Cyber, Response and Services Branch. The Anonymous operation came just days after US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano warned of a looming "cyber 9/11" that could especially target critical infrastructure planks such as water, electricity and gas lines. The loosely affiliated network of hacktivists, has attacked sites around the world, including those of MasterCard and Visa, the Justice Department and the Tunisian and Yemeni governments.


Иконка комментария блок соц сети
Hacker group Anonymous said it disabled the US Sentencing Commission's website Saturday in revenge for the death of Internet freedom advocate Aaron Swartz, and vowed to release government data, AFP reports. The website of the commission, an independent agency of the US Justice Department involved in sentencing, was apparently hacked into early Saturday. Anonymous threatened to make public the encryption keys to files that could potentially embarrass judges and other federal employees, saying it acted in protest at the Justice Department's alleged mishandling of Swartz's case. Swartz was facing 35 years in prison and a $1 million fine for breaking into a closet at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to plug into the computer network. He downloaded millions of academic journal articles he had allegedly planned to distribute for free. Friends and relatives have accused overzealous prosecutors of contributing to the 26-year-old's suicide. He was found hanged in his New York apartment earlier this month. Swartz was just 14 when he co-developed the RSS feeds that are now the norm for publishing updates online and went on to help launch social news website Reddit. "As a result of the FBI's infiltration and entrapment tactics, several more of our brethren now face similar disproportionate persecution, the balance of their lives hanging on the severely skewed scales of a broken justice system," Anonymous said in a video posted on YouTube. The hackers said they had infiltrated several US government computer networks and copied secret data that they could release. Likening the data to a nuclear weapon, Anonymous said it had "enough fissile material for multiple warheads" it could launch against the Justice Department and agencies that the group says intrude on individual liberties. The FBI said in a statement that it was investigating the attack. "We were aware as soon as it happened and are handling it as a criminal investigation," said Richard McFeely, of the bureau's Criminal, Cyber, Response and Services Branch. The Anonymous operation came just days after US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano warned of a looming "cyber 9/11" that could especially target critical infrastructure planks such as water, electricity and gas lines. The loosely affiliated network of hacktivists, has attacked sites around the world, including those of MasterCard and Visa, the Justice Department and the Tunisian and Yemeni governments.
Читайте также
Join Telegram
The most trendy gifts for 2024 Holidays
Strike in Zhanaozen: New details emerge
Volcanic eruption has begun in Iceland
Bitcoin reaches all-time high again
Sirens sounded across Kazakhstan
Kazhydromet warns Almaty and Shymkent
Kazakhstanis advised to leave Ukraine
Sirens to sound throughout Kazakhstan
COVID-19 may shrink cancer tumors
Earthquake struck Kyrgyzstan overnight
Apple stops making popular device
Kazakhstan may have its own Antalya
How Tokayev was greeted in Serbia
Abkhazia's president signs resignation
Лого TengriSport мобильная Лого TengriLife мобильная Иконка меню мобильная
Иконка закрытия мобильного меню

Exchange Rates

 498.59   521.12   4.87 

 

Weather

 

Редакция Advertising
Социальные сети